I have an MEng from an Architectural Engineering program with a Structural Emphasis. I hold a Civil PE in NE and TN and an SE in Illinois. I'm preparing an application for the CA PE and hope to sit for their seismic and surveying this Fall. I spent 2 years with a structural consultant in NYC doing commercial/institutional design including steel, reinforced concrete, and masonry analysis and design. I spent 2 years at a nuclear power plant providing structural support for plant maintenance, modifications, and regulatory compliance. I primarily dealt with steel and reinforced concrete although I got some exposure to piping design, pipe supports, and hardened structures of various sorts. I spent 2 years at a Class 1 railroad primarily managing bridge maintenance and replacement projects including timber, masonry, steel, reinforced concrete, and prestressed concrete structures, foundations, and retaining structures. I'm currently structural lead for a construction equipment manufacturer providing structural steel design for gravity, wind, and seismic loads at sites worldwide.
I've learned something (or some things!) at each stop along the way and my current position is the best fit for my interests so far. I'm working with steel, my favorite material and designing interesting and challenging non-building structures for nearly all conceivable loads and site conditions. I get to do a lot of design and analysis, which I really enjoy, and there is very little coordination with other "design professionals", which I also really enjoy. Most people think I'm crazy for moving along and walking away from previous jobs, but I encourage everyone I meet to keep their eyes and ears open because you never know when a better opportunity or better fit will come along.
By the way, in my experience nuclear regulators are far, far, far worse than any architect I've worked with.